A systematic evaluation of the performance and effectiveness of a Field Operational Test (FOT) of an integrated corridor-level adaptive control system was attempted from fall 1994 through spring 1999 in the City of Irvine, California. The FOT was conducted by a consortium consisting of the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans), the City of Irvine, and two private sector consultants, National Engineering Technologies, Inc. (NET) and Farradyne Systems, Inc. (FSI, now PB/FSI), with the City of Irvine as the lead agency. The FOT was cost-share funded by the Federal Highway Administration as part of the Intelligent Vehicle Highway System Field Operational Test Program. The FOT involves an integrated Advanced Transportation Management System (ATMS) which extends the capabilities of existing traffic management systems in the City of Irvine and in Caltrans District 12 (D12). The evaluation originally entailed both a technical performance assessment and a comprehensive institutional analysis. This documentation of the Irvine Field Operation Test does not constitute a formal evaluation due to the failure of any of the planned technologies to be successfully implemented in the field. Due to the extended time frame associated with the project and the significant range of technical and institutional issues associated with the development and eventual failure of the FOT, a summary of project development, institutional barriers, and technical failures is provided.
Abstract:
Publication date:
January 1, 2001
Publication type:
Research Report
Citation:
McNally, M. G., Moore, I. I., & MacCarley, C. A. (2001). Documentation of the Irvine Integrated Corridor Freeway Ramp Metering and Arterial Adaptive Control Field Operational Test (UCB-ITS-PRR-2001-2). https://escholarship.org/uc/item/75h99809